Nizza

Article ID EUF3146

Title

Nizza

Description

View shows a general view of Nizza at the Côte d'Azur from the sea with ships in the harbour.

Year

ca. 1867

Artist

Pibaraud

Historical Description

Probably around 350 BC, the Phocaeans from the area around Marseilles defeated the Ligurians and founded Νίκαια Níkaia ("the Victorious", after Nike, the goddess of victory). n the fifth century, Cemenelum was abandoned in favor of Nikaia. Provence fell to the Ostrogoths in 508, and to the Frankish Empire in 536. In 813, 859, and 880, Nice was sacked by Saracen invaders who came from the sea. Also in the following period (e.g. in 943) the city was at the mercy of Muslim attacks. The Muslims had established themselves in the nearby Fraxinetum from 888 until around 975, before Count William of Provence was able to drive them out. In 1144 a city council ("Consulat") is mentioned, in 1176 a first city constitution. However, Nice remained subject to the County of Provence, so that in the twelfth century the city was Aragonese and from 1246 belonged to the House of Anjou. In the 13th century, competition with Genoa became increasingly noticeable, which even briefly gained suzerainty over the city around 1215. In 1524, Francis I of Valois-Angoulême passed through the county of Nice to assert French claims in Lombardy against the Habsburgs. Two years later, a truce between Francis I and Charles V was negotiated in Nice through the mediation of Pope Paul III. In 1543, the siege and sack of Nice by the French troops and the fleet of Khair ad-Din Barbarossa took place; the citadel was held. According to local tradition, it was a washerwoman, Catherine Ségourane, who, as a "Joan of Arc of Nice", forced the Turks to leave. In 1600, Henry IV had the city besieged. On the occasion of the Peace of Lyon of 1601, Nice remained with the Duchy of Savoy, which established one of the three courts of the country here in 1614. In 1744, during the War of the Austrian Succession, Franco-Spanish troops conquered the county, which, however, was again granted to Savoy in the Peace of Aachen of 1748. In 1749, the Bassin Lympia, today's port, was created. In 1793, after a referendum, the county was annexed to France and became the 85th département with the name Alpes-Maritimes.

Dimensions (cm)16 x 25
ConditionVery good
Coloringcolored
TechniqueWood engraving

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